Our Common Humanity in the Information Age. Principles and Values for Development


A NEW PARADIGM FOR HUMAN TRANSFORMATION


Download 0.61 Mb.
Pdf ko'rish
bet27/132
Sana14.12.2022
Hajmi0.61 Mb.
#1002369
1   ...   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   ...   132
Bog'liq
book283

A NEW PARADIGM FOR HUMAN TRANSFORMATION: 
RESPECT FOR NATURE AND OTHER CORE VALUES 
IN THE 21
ST
 CENTURY
Alfredo Sfeir-Younis, President, The Zambuling Institute For Human 
Transformation
Our Common Humanity in the Information Age event has already created a powerful 
echo of positive energies as a result of your intent, now reaching the hearts and souls of 
every person in the world.
To me, the unique feature of this meeting is not really to have organized yet another 
debate on the merits or the state of play as regards the Millennium Development Goals 
(MDGs). Its merits rest on “a common set of values and principles” that must become the 
true realization of the Millennium Declaration and its goals. The values and principles 


Chapter III – Respect for Nature and Sustainable Development | 39 
cited are: freedom, equality, solidarity, tolerance and respect for all human rights, respect 
for nature and shared responsibility, which bring a breakthrough in the thinking about 
development issues.
It is a breakthrough because more often than not, the attention is only paid to the 
peculiarities of material instruments or development outcomes, with little attention paid 
to the ultimate causes and conditions that are responsible for those outcomes. Thus, for 
example, while it is certainly relevant to focus on poverty as an outcome of development, 
it is also essential to focus on, and be very clear about, the ultimate causes and conditions 
of poverty including, also, who creates it, thus, whether we attain the targets set around 
poverty. It would be different if we base our actions on solidarity and shared 
responsibility – than letting the values of the market, the values of exclusion and money
dominate the process.
The same applies to the destruction of nature. It is essential to establish the ultimate 
causes and conditions. And, as seen later on, there is no doubt that our value system plays 
an essential role in this destruction. A good example is that of pollution. While it is 
important to focus our attention on the ‘what’ pollution is all about and ‘how much’ 
pollution is being generated or reduced, it is also essential to focus on who pollutes.
To focus on our value system represents an essential first step in moving towards the root 
causes of the situational aspects around all the MDGs. The links between the outcomes 
and the generator of those outcomes is essential and must be made explicit.
This topic is even going one step further, by focusing not only on ‘who’ pollutes, but 
‘why’ such a person, group, nation, or any other entity, pollutes. The ‘why’ of pollution 
opens new understandings of the actors, makes them responsible for the solutions and 
sheds lots of light on behavioral issues and developmental ones.
Going beyond the ‘why’, suggests that one important reason the MDGs are not yet 
attained is because the values and principles are neither being self-realized nor practiced 
yet. Thus, if we all were moved by the values of respect for nature, solidarity, and shared 
responsibility, for example, most people, countries, corporations, international 
organizations, and other relevant entities will engage themselves in a different process 
and will select different instruments and conditions s o that these MDGs are fulfilled.
If we add another value, the value of interdependence with all living beings and nature, 
and we had the full realization of this interdependence, we would not allow nature to be 
destructed the way we are doing it now. We will soon realize that the destruction of 
nature is our own self-destruction. Nor we will allow one person in extreme poverty or to 


40 | Our Common Humanity in the Information Age 
go hungry. Because their state of poverty and hunger greatly affect our own processes of 
human transformation. But few have indeed realized this value of interdependence. 
Thus, this topic has anchored the ‘why’ people or nations do what they do on the nature 
and self realization of human and spiritual values. These values and belief are supposed 
to be the ultimate determinant of today’s behavior, decisions and actions around the 
MDGs. Respect for nature is a value and it must be self realized. It is the insufficient self 
realization of these values that explains the duality between saying that we embrace those 
values in our personal life and practicing them in the life of the collective. This duality 
needs to be exposed and special means are to be developed to get rid of it.
Nevertheless, the new paradigm for human transformation in the 21
st
century does not 
end there. One has to go one more step. The full expression of this new paradigm 
demands that we close an important loop, as if we were going back to the very beginning 
of my presentation on causes and conditions. In particular, we have to close the gap 
between our capacities for the self -realization of those human and spiritual values and the 
nature and scope of development outcomes.
Let me emphasize the word “nature”, or the quality of our outer environment. Which 
brings us back to the issue of this panel: respect for nature. This next step is to understand 
that the full self-realization of these values –both individually and collectively—is 
essentially conditioned, and totally interdependent of, the material outcomes behind the 
MDGs, like poverty, gender inequality, health, pollution and environmental degradation, 
and the like.
In other words, this paradigm holds the view that these relationships - outcomes, actors, 
values and beliefs - are part of a continuum and that they are neither hierarchical nor 
linear in nature. These relationships belong to singularly and interconnected layers of 
life’s experiences in the material and spiritual realms.
Furthermore, the above affirms that it is essential that the value of respect for nature, 
solidarity and shared responsibility be self realized, and that the self-realization is to pass 
through, and it is interdependent of, the state of the natural environment. Thus, the 
implication is that if we live, for example, in a decayed natural environment we will 
never be able to fully realize the outer and inner dimensions and expressions of all the 
human values that are identified. And, this applies to shared responsibility, solidarity, 
peace, freedom, love, compassion or any other human and spiritual value. To sum up, it is 
essential to understand that the quality of the environment greatly defines and influences 
all our abilities to self-realize our values.


Chapter III – Respect for Nature and Sustainable Development | 41 
Just think for a moment how would your mind and soul feel when you reach one of those 
few pristine environments left in the world. Your chest expands, your breath gets deeper, 
and the clock of life stops to give the right of way to your solidarity, compassion or 
freedom. By contrast, also think about a process of human transformation in a world that 
looks like a garbage dump. It will seldom lead to the full self realization of human values.
This connectedness that it is intrinsic to the self realization of values and to the state of 
our outer environment is true for most, if not all, the human and spiritual values. In many 
ways, the quality of our outer environment is inseparable of our inner environment. It is 
like one of my Hindu Teachers once told me: the outer is like the inner and the inner is 
like the outer. This is why we must not remain on the sidelines when we see how much 
destruction is caused by the present economic system, accompanied by rapid 
globalization. It is not just a matter of material welfare but spiritual evolution as well.
Therefore, let us reach an important conclusion that the deficient attainment of the M DGs 
will, in fact, have a huge impact in the inner and outer processes of human 
transformation. Concretely, we will never be able to self realize those spiritual and 
human values if our external environment - nature and all living beings - is inadequate 
and, as a consequence, we will continue feeding into the systems we live in what we see 
as a vicious circle of human degradation.
Thus, the violation of human rights, gender discrimination, environmental destruction, 
inadequate levels of education and health, hunger, high mortality rates, and more, are all 
like powerful hand brakes to the attainment of higher levels of consciousness and 
coherence, both by human beings and all living beings.
This is why failing to attain the MDGs is tantamount to keeping the process of 
transformation and evolution of all living beings to its most incomplete and truncated 
expressions.
The fact that a person does not see these linkages, or feel nothing about these 
connections, is not a good reason to invalidate the above proposition. The test is not at the 
conceptual level. It is all experiential. This theme requires much more explanation, 
reflection, integration, and mastery. Those who have never felt these connections do not 
have the moral power to deny or invalidate such interdependence. This is a very complex 
moment in our human history.
§ When the global architecture (international organizations and their policies, 
programs and processes) seems to be profoundly questioned by a good majority of 
world citizens.


42 | Our Common Humanity in the Information Age 
§ When the leadership of the UN has changed, and the political tones and overtones 
move the attention away from the key daily challenges we are facing today.
Download 0.61 Mb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   ...   132




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling